Midyear economic outlook: Sticky inflation most everywhere (2024)

The themes we highlighted in theVanguard Economic and Market Outlook for 2023: Beating Back Inflation—persistent inflation, tight labor markets, rising policy interest rates—remain at midyear. Developed market economies have proved resilient. Labor markets have remained strong, leading to slower-than-expected disinflation. Wage pressures have moderated but remain persistent, especially in service industries. As a result, central banks have needed to raise monetary policy rates somewhat higher than we had anticipated.

We expect continued progress in the fight against inflation, with central banks having to keep interest rates in restrictive territory for longer. And with that, we anticipate some economic weakness in the months ahead.

The last mile to target inflation may take some time

There’s progress in the fight against inflation. But it’s too early to declare victory. Vanguard foresees developed market core inflation (which excludes food and energy prices) continuing to fall through the end of 2023 from recent generational highs. But we expect it will only be late 2024 or even 2025 before inflation falls back to central banks’ targets, which are mostly around 2%.

“We believe central banks have more work to do,” said Andrew Patterson, Vanguard senior international economist. “We’ve always said inflation wouldn’t come down magically, even as post-pandemic supply chain issues were resolved. The pandemic accelerated demographics-driven changes to labor markets. Strong demand for workers who can command higher pay than historical standards requires monetary policy that is clearly restrictive. The last leg of inflation reduction to central bank targets may be the most challenging.”

That last leg is also likely to vary by region, said Rhea Thomas, a Vanguard economist. “The initial catalysts for the surge in inflation were global in nature,” Thomas said. “The pace at which inflation travels that last mile to target will depend more heavily on local drivers: how restrictive policy tightening is in each country or region, and local demand, labor market, and housing dynamics.”

Thomas noted that central bankers in Australia, Canada, and now the United States have paused in what had been a relentless cycle of rate hikes. Hikes have since resumed in Australia and Canada, and the Federal Reserve policymakers have hinted they will resume lifting rates as well.

Inflation, policy elevate the risk of recession

United States

In the United States, the recovery from the shortest recession in more than 150 years—a two-month downturn in early 2020—has endured one of the most aggressive interest rate-hiking cycles in Federal Reserve history. Recent growth has been stable at about 2%, annualized. We still assign a high probability to a recession, though the odds have risen that it could be delayed from 2023 to 2024. Shelter inflation should slow in the second half of 2023 and return to its pre-pandemic pace by 2024. Slowing momentum in labor markets should also lower ex-shelter services inflation later this year.

In our initial outlook for 2023, we described a weakening of the labor market (along with slowing growth) as a necessary condition for falling rates of inflation. The labor market has had its own idea, remaining resilient even as disinflation has continued. Unemployment remains below 4%, where it stood when the Fed started its current rate-hiking cycle. We continue to expect some softening.

Given the long and variable lags between monetary policy shifts and discernible changes in economic activity, Federal Reserve policymakers could decide that the 500 basis points (5 percentage points) of interest rate hikes they’ve enacted since March 2022 are enough to knock inflation down to their 2% target. But we view at least one more rate increase as probable.

Euro area

In the euro area,we expect the slight economic contraction in the fourth quarter of 2022 and the first quarter of 2023, likely caused by the energy crisis, to give way to a new but short-lived expansion. Another downturn is likely to arrive this year or next, as the lagged effects of monetary policy tightening are realized.

By any measure, euro area inflation has declined meaningfully. Falling energy prices should help the headline inflation rate to further ease in coming months. Service-price inflation, linked to wage growth, is stickier and central to our expectation that core inflation will end 2023 at 3.3%, still well above the ECB’s 2.0% target.

The ECB has hiked interest rates by 400 basis points (4 percentage points) in 12 months. We expect one or two additional increases in 2023. Currently 3.50%, a deposit rate of 3.75%–4.00% would represent a restrictive policy stance. (The deposit rate is the annualized rate of interest paid by the ECB on banks’ overnight deposits.) It would exceed our inflation forecast and be more than twice our 1.50%–2.00% estimate of the region’s neutral rate of interest, a theoretical rate that neither stimulates nor inhibits growth.

After peaking in 2020 at 8.6% amid the COVID-19 pandemic, the unemployment rate eased to 6.5% in April 2023. We foresee a partial retracement to 7.0%–7.5% by year-end, as the ECB’s inflation-fighting campaign passes the one-year mark.

United Kingdom

As in other markets, we’ve been surprised by the resilience of the U.K. economy.Our initial forecast of a 2023 contraction in the production of goods and services has given way to an estimate of no year-over-year change in output. As elsewhere, we believe a recession remains more likely than a soft landing.

By a variety of measures, notably rates of employment and wage growth, the labor market displayed strength in the opening months of 2023. Yet consumers have not been confident about future employment. We expect a modest rise in unemployment in the second half of the year, to 4.0%–4.5% at year-end.

Strengthening services inflation has driven core inflation in the U.K. to more than 30-year highs, whereas core inflation is retreating in many other developed markets. We expect core services inflation to drive broader headline inflation in the year ahead as price increases for food, energy, and other goods wane. We expect both core and headline inflation to average 5.3% in 2023, more than a percentage point higher than our view at the start of the year.

We’ve recently raised our forecast for the Bank of England’s terminal rate by three-quarters of a percentage point, to a year-end level of 5.50%–5.75%, given stronger-than-expected inflation data, the continued tight labor market, and accelerating wage growth. We maintain our view that rates will not be cut until mid-2024 at the earliest.

China

In China, we now expect year-over-year economic growth of 5.5%–6.0% in 2023, more than we anticipated at the start of the year. But the bulk of those gains have already occurred, meaning that a slower growth is coming in the second half of the year. Full-year growth above a conservative government target is likely, but three years of policy uncertainty will weigh on confidence.

The labor market has improved steadily since China’s post-pandemic reopening, with the headline unemployment rate declining to 5.2%. However, youth unemployment has climbed to a record high, posing a downside risk to growth. We forecast a year-end headline rate of unemployment of 4.7%.

Lower energy and pork prices have contributed to weak inflation readings. A rebound later this year is likely as credit demand strengthens and food and energy prices stabilize. Still, we have nearly halved our initial inflation forecast, to 1% on a year-over-year basis at year-end.

A recent People’s Bank of China cut to 2.65% for the key 1-year medium-term lending facility should have little tangible economic effect. We believe an additional 10–20 basis points (0.1–0.2 percentage point) of cuts are likely. But China’s challenge is a lack of demand for money, not a lack of supply. The likelihood of aggressive fiscal stimulus is low because of an increasing local government debt burden.

Emerging markets

Our perception of economic conditions in emerging markets varies by region.

  • InLatin America, inflation appears to have peaked, but we expect central banks to lower their interest rate targets slowly. We anticipate full-year 2023 growth around 1.5%, slowing moderately in 2024. We foresee Latin America core inflation persisting around 6.3% in both 2023 and 2024.
  • The challenges facing the euro area and the United Kingdom are magnified indeveloping Europe. We expect growth of around 1% in 2023 and just below that level in 2024 in the greater Central Europe and Africa regions and core inflation to remain in double digits.
  • We expectemerging Asiato boast sharply higher growth than the rest of the world’s emerging markets. We foresee growth of 5.25% this year, cooling somewhat to 5% in 2024.
  • The outlook is based on China’s strong first-quarter growth and resilient activity globally. Compared with emerging markets globally, emerging Asia faces tame inflation of less than 2% in 2023, meaning central banks don’t need to restrict activity to constrain prices.

Expected 10-year asset class returns

Equity markets around the world generally have rallied strongly—with the notable exception of China, the dominant emerging market by total value—since we issuedVanguard Economic and Market Outlook for 2023: Beating Back Inflation. For most investors around the world, the gains have reduced the expected returns of global equities excluding local markets.

Bond markets worldwide also generally have recorded solid gains—if only in nominal, not inflation-adjusted terms—since late 2022. Relative to our initial forecast, expected returns generally declined slightly.

Our forecasts are derived from a May 31, 2023, running of the Vanguard Capital Markets Model®. Figures are based on a 2-point range around the 50th percentile of the distribution of return outcomes for equities and a 1-point range around the 50th percentile for fixed income.

Following are our 10-year annualized return forecasts. Forecasts are from the perspective of local investors in local currencies.

U.S. stocks:4.1% to 6.1%;ex-U.S. stocks:6.5% to 8.5%.

U.S. bonds:3.8% to 4.8%;ex-U.S. bonds:3.7% to 4.7% when hedged in U.S. dollars.

IMPORTANT:The projections or other information generated by the Vanguard Capital Markets Model regarding the likelihood of various investment outcomes are hypothetical in nature, do not reflect actual investment results, and are not guarantees of future results. Distribution of return outcomes from the VCMM are derived from 10,000 simulations for each modeled asset class. Simulations are as of May 31, 2023. Results from the model may vary with each use and over time. For more information, please see the Notes section below.

Notes:

  • All investing is subject to risk, including the possible loss of the money you invest. Diversification does not ensure a profit or protect against a loss in a declining market. Be aware that fluctuations in the financial markets and other factors may cause declines in the value of your account. There is no guarantee that any particular asset allocation or mix of funds will meet your investment objectives or provide you with a given level of income. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
  • Investments in stocks and bonds issued by non-U.S. companies are subject to risks including country/regional risk and currency risk. These risks are especially high in emerging markets.
  • Bond funds are subject to the risk that an issuer will fail to make payments on time, and that bond prices will decline because of rising interest rates or negative perceptions of an issuer’s ability to make payments.

About the Vanguard Capital Markets Model

  • IMPORTANT:The projections and other information generated by the Vanguard Capital Markets Model regarding the likelihood of various investment outcomes are hypothetical in nature, do not reflect actual investment results, and are not guarantees of future results. VCMM results will vary with each use and over time.
  • The VCMM projections are based on a statistical analysis of historical data. Future returns may behave differently from the historical patterns captured in the VCMM. More important, the VCMM may be underestimating extreme negative scenarios unobserved in the historical period on which the model estimation is based.
  • The Vanguard Capital Markets Model® is a proprietary financial simulation tool developed and maintained by Vanguard’s Investment Strategy Group. The model forecasts distributions of future returns for a wide array of broad asset classes. Those asset classes include U.S. and international equity markets, several maturities of the U.S. Treasury and corporate fixed income markets, international fixed income markets, U.S. money markets, commodities, and certain alternative investment strategies. The theoretical and empirical foundation for the Vanguard Capital Markets Model is that the returns of various asset classes reflect the compensation investors require for bearing different types of systematic risk (beta). At the core of the model are estimates of the dynamic statistical relationship between risk factors and asset returns, obtained from statistical analysis based on available monthly financial and economic data. Using a system of estimated equations, the model then applies a Monte Carlo simulation method to project the estimated interrelationships among risk factors and asset classes as well as uncertainty and randomness over time. The model generates a large set of simulated outcomes for each asset class over several time horizons. Forecasts are obtained by computing measures of central tendency in these simulations. Results produced by the tool will vary with each use and over time.
  • The primary value of the VCMM is in its application to analyzing potential client portfolios. VCMM asset-class forecasts—comprising distributions of expected returns, volatilities, and correlations—are key to the evaluation of potential downside risks, various risk–return trade-offs, and the diversification benefits of various asset classes. Although central tendencies are generated in any return distribution, Vanguard stresses that focusing on the full range of potential outcomes for the assets considered, such as the data presented in this paper, is the most effective way to use VCMM output.
  • The VCMM seeks to represent the uncertainty in the forecast by generating a wide range of potential outcomes. It is important to recognize that the VCMM does not impose “normality” on the return distributions, but rather is influenced by the so-called fat tails and skewness in the empirical distribution of modeled asset-class returns. Within the range of outcomes, individual experiences can be quite different, underscoring the varied nature of potential future paths. Indeed, this is a key reason why we approach asset-return outlooks in a distributional framework.

Indexes used in Vanguard Capital Markets Model simulations

The long-term returns of our hypothetical portfolios are based on data for the appropriate market indexes as of December 31, 2021; December 31, 2022; and May 31, 2023. We chose these benchmarks to provide the most complete history possible, and we apportioned the global allocations to align with Vanguard’s guidance in constructing diversified portfolios. Asset classes and their representative forecast indexes are as follows:

U.S. equities:MSCI US Broad Market Index.
Global ex-U.S. equities:MSCI All Country World ex USA Index.
U.S. aggregate bonds:Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index.
Global ex-U.S. bonds:Bloomberg Global Aggregate ex-USD Index.

This article is listed under

  • U.S.

As a seasoned economic analyst with a comprehensive understanding of global financial markets, I can confidently delve into the nuances and implications embedded in the article you provided. My expertise is underpinned by a rigorous analysis of economic indicators, monetary policy dynamics, and market trends, allowing me to offer insights that extend beyond mere observation.

The Vanguard Economic and Market Outlook for 2023 underscores the persistence of inflation as a central concern, highlighting key factors such as tight labor markets and rising policy interest rates. Here is a breakdown of the concepts mentioned in the article:

  1. Persistent Inflation:

    • The article emphasizes the ongoing challenge of persistent inflation, particularly in developed market economies.
    • Central banks are grappling with the need to keep interest rates in restrictive territory to combat inflation.
  2. Labor Markets:

    • Labor markets, despite expectations of disinflation, have remained strong, leading to slower-than-expected reduction in inflation.
    • Wage pressures, especially in service industries, have moderated but continue to persist, impacting inflation dynamics.
  3. Monetary Policy:

    • Central banks, including those in Australia, Canada, and the United States, have raised policy interest rates higher than initially anticipated.
    • The article suggests that central banks will need to maintain restrictive monetary policy for a longer duration to achieve progress against inflation.
  4. Regional Variances:

    • The last leg of inflation reduction is expected to vary by region, influenced by factors such as local demand, labor market dynamics, and housing conditions.
  5. United States:

    • The U.S. has undergone an aggressive interest rate-hiking cycle, with stable growth but a higher probability of a recession, potentially delayed to 2024.
    • Shelter inflation is expected to slow in the second half of 2023, and there is anticipation of a softening in the labor market.
  6. Euro Area:

    • The euro area experienced economic contraction, and the article predicts a short-lived expansion. Core inflation is expected to end 2023 at 3.3%, above the ECB’s target.
    • The ECB has raised interest rates significantly, with expectations of additional increases in 2023.
  7. United Kingdom:

    • The UK economy has shown resilience, deviating from the initial forecast of contraction. However, a recession is still considered more likely than a soft landing.
    • Strengthening services inflation has driven core inflation to more than 30-year highs, leading to an upward revision of the Bank of England’s terminal rate.
  8. China:

    • China's economic growth is expected to be 5.5%–6.0% in 2023, with a slowdown in the second half of the year.
    • Despite improvements in the labor market, challenges like record-high youth unemployment and weak inflation persist.
  9. Emerging Markets:

    • In Latin America, inflation appears to have peaked, but interest rate cuts are expected to be gradual.
    • Developing Europe faces lower growth, double-digit core inflation, and challenges similar to the euro area and the UK.
    • Emerging Asia is anticipated to have higher growth, with lower inflation, allowing central banks more flexibility.
  10. Expected 10-Year Asset Class Returns:

    • The article provides forecasts for annualized returns for various asset classes, including U.S. and ex-U.S. stocks and bonds, based on the Vanguard Capital Markets Model®.

This detailed analysis offers a comprehensive overview of the economic landscape, providing investors and policymakers with valuable insights into the complex interplay of factors influencing global markets.

Midyear economic outlook: Sticky inflation most everywhere (2024)

FAQs

What is the outlook for inflation? ›

J.P. Morgan Research forecasts global core inflation will remain sticky at around 3% in 2024. In the U.S., inflation has cooled significantly but still remains above target. Against a challenging growth backdrop, the road to lower inflation also looks bumpy in the U.K. and the Euro zone.

Where is the economy headed in 2024? ›

S&P Global Ratings expects U.S. real GDP growth of 2.5% in 2024 as the labor market remains sturdy. We continue to expect the economy to transition to slightly below-potential growth in the next couple of years.

What is the economic outlook for the United States? ›

The US economy entered 2024 on strong footing, but headwinds including rising consumer debt and elevated interest rates will weigh on economic growth. While we do not forecast a recession in 2024, we do expect consumer spending growth to cool and for overall GDP growth to slow to under 1% over Q2 and Q3 2024.

What are economists saying about 2024? ›

A panel of economists expect this year to be characterized by faster growth, shrinking inflation and healthy job creation — a far cry from the widespread fears of a recession that marked 2023.

Will inflation ever stop? ›

In 2024. A September CNBC survey of analysts, economists and fund managers reveals that most believe that by 2024 inflation will have sunk close to the Fed's 2% target. If so, we'll enjoy lower prices for groceries, consumer goods and the general cost of living.

What is inflation right now? ›

US Inflation Rate (I:USIR)

US Inflation Rate is at 3.48%, compared to 3.15% last month and 4.98% last year. This is higher than the long term average of 3.28%.

Will the US be in a recession in 2024? ›

While no longer forecasting a recession in 2024, we do expect real GDP growth to slow to near zero percent over Q2 and Q3.”

Will there be an economic crisis in 2024? ›

UN Trade and Development (UNCTAD) forecasts global economic growth to slow to 2.6% in 2024, just above the 2.5% threshold commonly associated with a recession. This marks the third consecutive year of growth below the pre-pandemic rate, which averaged 3.2% between 2015 and 2019.

Will 2024 bring a recession? ›

Yet a quarter of the nation's business economists still think a recession is likely this year. Some 24% of the respondents in a survey by the National Association of Business Economists predict the U.S. will suffer a downturn in 2024. And 2% even think a recession is already underway.

Is there an economic crisis in us? ›

Though the economy occasionally sputtered in 2022, it has certainly been resilient — and now, in the first quarter of 2024, the U.S. is still not currently in a recession, according to a traditional definition.

How good is the economy right now? ›

Economy. Let's look at the data. In the first quarter, real GDP was up 5.3% from a year earlier. In addition, real GDP was up 1.6% from the previous quarter, the strongest increase since the first quarter of 2023.

Does the US have a strong economy? ›

The United States is a highly developed/advanced mixed economy. It is the world's largest economy by nominal GDP; it is also the second largest by purchasing power parity (PPP), behind China. It has the world's seventh highest per capita GDP (nominal) and the eighth highest per capita GDP (PPP) as of 2022.

What's going to happen in 2024? ›

2024 will also be a big year for elections - even dubbed the biggest election year in history by the Economist - with some 4 billion voters set to head to the polls for regional, legislative and presidential elections across 60 countries.

What's going to happen to the market in 2024? ›

The market sees a greater than 80% chance of at least five rate cuts from current levels by the end of 2024. Investor optimism about the economic outlook has improved dramatically from a year ago, but there's still a risk that Fed policy tightening could tip the economy into a recession in 2024.

Why is inflation so high in 2024? ›

What drove March 2024's inflation numbers? There are two big boulders sitting on the road to disinflation. Those two big boulders are the cost of housing and gas prices. The Bureau of Labor Statistics notes that “these two indices contributed over half of the monthly increase in the index for all items.”

What is the projected inflation rate for the next 5 years? ›

On the basis of these inflation forecasts, average consumer price inflation should be 3.3% in 2024 and 1.9% in 2025, compared to 4.06% in 2023 and 9.59% in 2022.

Will inflation get worse in 2024? ›

SAVANNAH, Ga. (WSAV) — Many have felt the impacts of high inflation of the previous two years, but experts bear good news for American wallets. It is expected that federal funds rate will drop 1.5% by the end of the year, making the current rate of 5.3% to 3.8%.

What is the 5 year expected inflation rate? ›

5-Year, 5-Year Forward Inflation Expectation Rate is at 2.29%, compared to 2.26% the previous market day and 2.17% last year. This is higher than the long term average of 2.25%.

How long will inflation last? ›

We expect inflation to average 1.9% from 2024 to 2028—falling just under the Fed's 2.0% inflation target.

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